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46 Werke 616 Mitglieder 13 Rezensionen

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Jeffrey Robinson, journalist and author of more than twenty-five books, is an internationally recognized expert on organized crime, fraud, and money laundering. Named "the world's most important financial crime journalist" by the British Bankers' Association, he was based in London, England, for mehr anzeigen more than twenty-five years and now lives in New York. weniger anzeigen

Beinhaltet die Namen: Robinson Jeffrey, Jeffery Robinson

Werke von Jeffrey Robinson

The Sink (2003) 43 Exemplare
Yamani: The inside story (1988) 26 Exemplare
Bardot: An Intimate Portrait (1994) 25 Exemplare
Grace of Monaco: The True Story (2014) 17 Exemplare
Margin of the Bulls (1995) 7 Exemplare
Princesse Grace (2014) 5 Exemplare
Trump Tower (2012) 4 Exemplare
The Monk's Disciples (1997) 3 Exemplare
Pietrov and Other Games (1985) 2 Exemplare
Plutonium Consprcy (1988) 2 Exemplare
A TRUE AND PERFECT KNIGHT (1999) 2 Exemplare
Deadly Vantage (2019) 1 Exemplar
Teamwork (1982) 1 Exemplar
Rainier et Grace (2005) 1 Exemplar
Hotel (1997) 1 Exemplar
Untold Tales - Volume 2 (2019) 1 Exemplar
Untold Tales - Volume 3 (2019) 1 Exemplar
Grace ksiezna Monako (2014) 1 Exemplar
Ginger Jar (1988) 1 Exemplar
Brigitte Bardot (1995) 1 Exemplar

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Geburtstag
1945
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
USA

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Summary: Discusses how we use various apologetic approaches adapted to the various people we meet, thoughtfully and gently seeking to undercut their objections, giving reasons for our hope in Christ.

Jeffrey Robinson is convinced as a pastor that there is still a need for apologetics, indeed for persuasion in seeking to call people to belief in the gospel. He believes persuading people of the truth is simply part of the call all of us have to faithful witness, that it glorifies God, and flows from the commands to love God and others with all our being, including our minds. But our demeanor is crucial, calling for integrity and gentleness.

Understanding a person’s worldview suppositions is crucial to persuasion. For one thing, often only Christians are assumed to have them, when in fact we all do. Robinson offers examples of uncovering these in conversation, exposing inconsistencies, and showing how Christian belief better addresses these, or even how other systems live off inherited Christian belief.

Robinson then discusses different apologetic approaches: fideism, classical apologetics, evidentialism, and presuppositionalism, and reformed epistemology. Rather than advocating a single approach, he would propose that an eclectic apologetic is what we need–different approaches to persuade different people. In the same chapter, as he discusses the noetic effects of sin, he cites James Spiegel’s The Making of an Atheist to talk about “father wounds”–absent, abusive, and aloof, fathers–and the many famous atheists for whom this is true (no counter-examples are listed). I found this intriguing but have also found there were “church wounds”–whether the dismissal of questions or personal observation of hypocrisy or abuse

He turns to the role of undercutting defeaters (UCDs), which rather than rebutting conclusions, undercut and reveal the flaws in a reasoning process. He shows how Jesus does this in the hypothetical of the woman with seven husbands who died, his response to being accused of casting out demons with Satan’s power (the house divided argument), and the question about paying taxes to Caesar. He then explores examples that arise including the hypocrisy in the church objection. He follows this with a discussion comparing Jesus to other religious leaders. He then concludes with reasons for hope in the incarnation and the resurrection and how the work of Christ addresses evil and death.

This work does not replace classic works on apologetics but refers the reader to these. Rather, Robinson argues for the part of persuasion, off both offering reasons to believe and gently but with conviction encouraging others to examine their own beliefs. He offers help in how we respond to and undercut objections to the faith, and how we speak to the crucial issue of hope. A willingness to contend for truth can be an act of loving well.

I found much of value here, including the reaffirmation of the importance of persuasion. At the same time, I would love to see a discussion of persuasion that includes the witness of beauty, the power of loving Christian community, and even the persuasive power of being in the presence of praying Christians. I have seen people come to faith through all of these and wonder how the author would incorporate this into his “eclectic” and “versatile” apologetic. Personally, I like the idea of using everything at our disposal to make known the wonder of God’s saving work through Christ!

____________________

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.
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BobonBooks | Feb 6, 2024 |
 
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kburne1 | Aug 13, 2022 |
A shocking book about global crime. Shocking because the book is non-fiction. Another depressing eye-opener about some very nasty people. Well written
 
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GeneHunter | Mar 13, 2016 |
There are legit concerns about Bitcoin (the virtual currency). Some of them are even raised here.

But the overwhelming condescension and derision that drips from every page makes it a hard slog to get through to the substance.

Throw in the author's overwhelming faith in government and Keynesian pseudo-economics poisons the whole affair beyond recovery. Look elsewhere for facts not buried under mountains of bias and cant.
 
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erebor | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 9, 2016 |

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